A state care planning council is a one-stop source of community providers and advisers who help aging seniors and their families deal with eldercare needs. State councils also provide a platform for local area planning groups – local care planning or elder planning councils – who are senior service providers and advisors. These local councils offer educational workshops in the community, and a variety of local senior services through a single contact.

Welcome to (longtermcarelink.net) the

National Care Planning Council (NCPC)

"We are the most comprehensive resource for Eldercare, Senior Services and Care Planning anywhere.
We publish articles, books, and guides to help you learn how to meet the needs of seniors. The providers and services listed under "Senior Services"
are here to help with any retirement or eldercare need." - Thomas Day, Director

The following were created for professionals working in the eldercare industry.

Life Resource & Retirement Planning System - New!Life Resource Planning will guide your clients while they prepare for their final years of life. Our online questionnaire's will produce PDF Plans for your clients to help them plan for long term care, access government benefits, find sources of funding, set aside money for death benefits, preserve assets, and plan for Medicaid.

Many aging seniors rely entirely on family or other trusted individuals to help them. Whether it is physiological or psychological, as people grow older, they tend to grow more childlike. The dependence upon caregivers or family members makes an older person more vulnerable for abuse and financial exploitation. Legal arrangements and protective actions by family may be necessary to shield loved ones from abuse. Continue Reading...

Every senior dreads the day they lose their independence by having to give up their driver’s license. The safety of the driver and the community may be at stake. However, it doesn’t have to be that hard. There are alternatives to driving to make the transition easier. Continue Reading...

Modern Health Care | August 1, 2017

About 5% of the Medicare population—or 2 million beneficiaries—would benefit from home-based primary care. These patients are too sick to leave their home and have serious chronic conditions that require frequent visits from a physician, nurse practitioner or physician assistant. Continue Reading...

New York Times | July 28, 2017

The National Center for State Courts, a nonprofit think tank, estimates that guardians across the country supervise 1.3 million adults and an aggregate of $50 billion of their assets. Brenda K. Uekert, the center’s principal court research consultant, said that with the “aging of the baby boomers and the onset of dementia, we expect those numbers to go up.” Continue Reading...

News 4 Jax | August 1, 2017

The nation's opioid crisis is having a significant impact on the veteran population, and after the Office of Inspector General for the Department of Veterans Affairs looked at how these painkillers are currently being prescribed, it finds veterans are being put at an increased risk. Continue Reading...

Guide to Long Term Care Planning

This section,
called the Guide to Long Term Care Planning, contains books, articles, and free non-commercial resources which
will help you with your long term care planning needs.

About Long Term Care

The need for long term care arises when an individual requires from someone else, assistance with medical care, daily activities, comfort, supervision or advice. Most long term care is provided by family members.

Links to LTC News and Interviews

These are links to online news sources and to online magazines that deal with long term care issues. We also provide a number of radio interviews dealing with long term care issues. These are interviews with experts in the field.

About Caregiving

Caregiving involves two groups of people who provide long term care. Roughly 60% of all care is provided by family members who receive no pay for their time. These folks are usually called informal caregivers. The balance of care is provided by formal caregivers who are volunteers or paid professionals.

Need for Long Term Care Planning

Even though long term care can be the greatest crisis an elderly person can experience, there is an appalling lack of preparation among older Americans. Scarce government funds and changing demographics make the need for planning even more critical than ever.

About Long Term Care at Home

Roughly 70% of all long term care is provided in the home primarily by a spouse, a daughter or daughter-in-law. More family caregivers are in the workplace or live far away and are finding it difficult to care for loved ones at home. Help is available in a number of ways.

7 Steps of Long Term Care Planning

Planning for long term care is a process for two generations. As a general rule, the older generation completes seven logical steps in this process. For a generation preparing for retirement the seven planning steps occur in phases before and after retirement.

About Home Telehealth

Home Telehealth is a useful home care service for rural areas where distances are great and nurses and aides find it difficult to visit patients. The home Telehealth patient uses vital sign monitoring attached to a computer and consults with the home care personnel over the phone and using the computer to feed information.

Knowing Who to Contact for Help

Most family caregivers simply don't know where to turn for help and advice. This is the largest article on the site and covers 11 vital services that all families should consider using. Many of these services go unused, simply because of lack of knowledge. In most cases, these services could save time, money and caregiver stress.

About Adult Day Care

Adult day care services have been around for about 30 years but providers have found it difficult to stay in business and families seem reluctant to use the services. This is unfortunate because this service can help people stay in their homes longer by providing medical care and giving care givers a rest. Next year Medicare may start paying for these services as an alternative to home care and this will give this industry a shot in the arm.

Paying the Cost of Care

Having money to pay for long term care when the time comes is probably the most important part of the planning process. For a younger generation, long term care insurance makes the most sense. For the older generation that hasn't provided funds for care, there are other options that might be available. But they never work as well as the insurance. This article also examines the past and future effect of inflation on various care services.

Retirement & Care Communities

Many active seniors are selling their homes and using the equity to purchase a retirement living arrangement on the seashore, in the mountains, in the desert or in the South where it's warm. Some seniors find new living arrangements that offer various degrees of eldercare. This article examines the various retirement living arrangements for the elderly.

Long Term Care Insurance

This is the most in-depth and comprehensive treatment of long term care insurance available anywhere; either for sale or for free. For those of you who want all the details, including numerous charts, this is the article for you. Estimates are that costs for this insurance are going up about 12% a year for the same buying age. You should not delay buying.

About Assisted Living

Prior to assisted living, elderly people who could not remain in their homes for various reasons had to go to a nursing home for care. Assisted living is an alternative that provides a more homelike environment, a more stimulating atmosphere and is generally about 60% of the cost of a nursing home.

Wills, Trusts & Powers of Attorney

This article discusses estate planning strategies for the elderly. This is not legal advice and an attorney should be used to prepare these documents. Many elderly fail to provide these documents for their family and when the time for care comes, family are scrambling to try and straighten out the mess.

About Nursing Homes

For many care recipients long term care is an evolving process of losing more and more physical or mental capacity. A nursing home is usually the last stop in this process. The nursing home is equipped to handle medical problems, disability and in some cases behavior problems that cannot be handled by any other provider. Because there are now so many other options for care prior to a nursing home, the trend is that residents on average are much sicker and older than in the past.

Medicaid Planning

Medicaid planning has gotten a bad name because a handful of practitioners have abused the system and taken unfair advantage of taxpayers. But Medicaid planning is really a useful strategy and is typically used to save what few assets are remaining for Medicaid spend down and to provide adequate income for the healthy spouse at home. Medicaid often robs the healthy spouse of a quality standard of living by not allowing enough needed assets and income.

About Hospice Care

Hospice care is a valuable service and generally under used except for terminal cancer patients. Hospice allows for compassion and dignity in the process of dying. Most families wait too long to have their doctor prescribe hospice from Medicare. It should be considered at an earlier stage.

Using Life Settlements

The life settlement and a related product called a viatical allow an investor to free up cash for an individual by investing in that person's death. The investor purchases the individual's life insurance policy for less than value and then recoups the investment plus interest with the death payout when the insured dies.

About Medicare & VA Long Term Care

Medicare provides limited coverage for home care and for nursing home rehabilitation from a three day hospital stay. If the patient is not recovering, Medicare eventually quits paying. Medicare also covers hospice care. The VA will also cover limited home care, assisted living and nursing home care under certain conditions. In addition many states have VA state nursing homes.

Using a Reverse Mortgage

After 15 years, reverse mortgages are finally starting to catch on. A reverse mortgage (Home Equity Conversion Mortgage) allows someone to tap the equity in his or her home and use it for anything. There are no income or credit requirements for this loan. It's the same as any other loan -- you own the title and the bank holds a lien. There is no requirement to make payments while you are alive and still living in the home.

About Medicaid Long Term Care

Medicaid provides nursing home coverage for elderly people over age 65 and for younger disabled people on SSI. Except for 13 states that test for income, in all other states, a person can receive Medicaid nursing home if assets are less than $2,000 and income is not sufficient to pay the full cost of care. Medicaid will make up the difference. Medicaid waivers are used to cover home care and assisted living services in all states. But in many states nursing homes are favored over these waiver programs.

Using a Care Manager

Elder or geriatric care managers are invaluable in helping family caregivers cope with the burden of caregiving. Everyone should use a care manager when the time for care comes. Unfortunately it's just the opposite. Family think they can do it themselves and rarely spend the money. Using a care manager is no different than using an attorney or a CPA. The family is confronting the maze of long term care services for the first time. The care manager has been there many times. A care manager will save time, money and stress.

About the National Aging Network

The national aging network was created by the Older Americans Act of 1965. It is administered by the Administration on Aging and by state aging departments. On a local level, services are offered through 655 area agencies on aging scattered all over the country. Its purpose is to provide a wide range of services to support Americans age 60 and over in the community and keep them out of nursing facilities. The aging network is the largest single provider of aging services in the country, utilizing 29,000 service providers and over 500,000 volunteers.

Supplements, Advantage Plans, Part D

This article goes into detail explaining how Medicare works and how Medicare supplements fit into the overall picture. A great deal of space is devoted to explaining the new Medicare Advantage plans and the new Medicare prescription drug, part D program. An effort is made to explain how they all fit together and the advantages of various coverages. We also provide step-by-step instructions on how to sign up for the new prescription drug plan. In addition we have an extremely popular list for Internet visitors linking to all 311 care providers for coverage.

Depression in Elderly Care Recipients

A scholarly article on recognizing depression in those receiving care and recognizing that treating that depression could result in a better quality of life for the care recipient. Dealing with depression may also relieve the stress on caregivers.

The Caregiver's Handbook

An excellent how-to-do-it book for caregivers, produced by San Diego Mental Health Services. Contained here are 31 pages of great advice, tips and instructions on how to deal with an elderly loved one needing long term care.

About Medical Care for the Elderly

There is a crisis in the health care treatment that elderly Americans receive in this country. Few doctors have training in providing health care to the elderly. As a result many seniors are over-medicated and under-treated and their quality of life may be severely affected. With proper treatment many of the afflictions of the elderly could be substantially reduced. Families should seek medical treatment through geriatric clinics or from geriatricians.

Elder and Family Mediation Services

A large number of families put up with family disagreements and family disputes and long lasting bitterness over the care of loved ones. Many people don't realize that a simple process called mediation could put their family back together again. Elder or family mediators bring disputing parties together and through mutual agreement and a written document help them to resolve their issues. This is an extremely valuable service.

About Elder Abuse

Elder abuse is the "dirty little secret" of caregiving. Estimates are that only about 10% of all abuse is ever reported. And it's possible that 10% of elderly and disabled Americans suffer abuse at the hands of caregivers or family members. The most frequent abuse is not in nursing homes but in the homes of the persons receiving care. This could be neglect, physical abuse, verbal abuse or financial abuse where children are stealing assets.

Professional Home Care Services

Although most home care is provided by family, friends or volunteers, there is a growing trend to hire paid individuals or professionals to provide this care in the home. Traditional caregivers can't provide care because of full-time employment or parents live a long distance away. This article discusses the use of traditional home health agencies, live-in care providers and personal or non-medical home care companies.

Technology & Remote Monitoring

This article discusses assistive technology, which is the use of devices to help with disability. Some of this equipment, labeled as durable medical equipment by Medicare, will be covered by Medicare. Such things as bed lifts, wheelchairs and scooters as an example. Also a variety of disability aids and help are discussed. Another area of interest is remote monitoring of loved ones at home and the use of alarm or medical alert devices.

Community Aging Services

There are many private, religious and government organizations across the country that provide supportive services for older people. Many of these services center around helping people stay in their homes and avoid having to go to live in an institution or perhaps move in with family. Other community services may provide socialization or training opportunities. Probably the best way to find these services is by dialing 211.

Reference Materials

For those of you who prefer to find your own source material, we have included reference material that we particularly like; sources we feel are rich in facts and figures. So far we have included 102 of these references. If you have a source that you particularly like, please let us know and we will include it on our listing.

End-of-Life Services

This is a lengthy article that examines dying, final directives, grief and bereavement, palliative care, pain management, funeral arrangements, funeral services, funeral preplanning and pre-need planning. This last service has become quite popular in recent years where people prepay and preplan the entire final arrangements.